Gladys Bronwyn Stern (17 June 1890 – 20 September 1973) orG. B. Stern, bornGladys Bertha Stern inLondon, England, wrote many novels, short stories, plays, memoirs, biographies and literary criticism.
GB Stern was born on 17 June 1890 inNorth Kensington, London, the second, by some years, of two sisters.[1] Her family lost their money in the Vaal River diamond crash. After that, they lived in a series of apartments, hotels and boarding houses. Gladys was schooled in England until the age of 16, when, with her parents, she traveled toContinental Europe and studied in Germany and Switzerland.[2]
She wrote her first novel,Pantomime, in 1914 at the age of 24. Her first critical success came withTwos and Threes in 1916. Her most popular books were the series known by the name of the first,The Matriarch. This was first published asTents of Israel in 1924. The others in the series areA Deputy Was King (1926),Mosaic (1930),Shining and Free (1935) andThe Young Matriarch (1942).[3]
The Matriarch series revolved around the Rakonitz and Czelovar families and were based on her own family. They are well-to-do and cosmopolitan Jews who settled in England from Hungary, Poland, Russia, and Austria. Like her family, they suffer through an economic crash.[4]
The first book in the series,The Matriarch, centers around two characters, the matriarch Anastasia and her granddaughter, Toni. Anastasia was based on Stern's great-aunt, who was incensed with the portrayal until the book became successful. The book describes in detail the complicated, florid and noisy life of this Jewish-English family through both triumphs and failures, weddings and funerals.[5]
Stern's plays includeThe Man Who Pays The Piper (1931), which was revived by theOrange Tree Theatre inRichmond, London in 2013.
WithSheila Kaye-Smith she wrote the dialoguesTalking ofJane Austen andMore Talk of Jane Austen. She also wrote a biography ofRobert Louis Stevenson and edited volumes of his works. Her final novel,Promise Not to Tell, was published in 1964.[1]
In 1934,Long Lost Father was adapted into afilm of the same title byRKO Pictures.In 1947,The Woman in the Hall was released as afilm of the same title.In 1966 her 1938 novelThe Ugly Dachshund was made into afilm of the same title.
She marriedNew Zealander Geoffrey Lisle Holdsworth in 1919 and divorced him "fairly soon after". Her closest male friends were the playwright John van Druten and Jack Cohen.[5] A long-time friend wasRebecca West, who came to call her "Peter", as did most of Stern's friends. Stern went through a number of secretaries but Freda Bromhead managed to survive five years with her and came back to help her years later when Stern was in a nursing home.[5]
Her family was never terribly religious and Stern herself disliked the word 'Jew' and preferred 'Israelite'.[5] In 1947 she converted to Catholicism. She wrote about the conversion in 1954 inAll in Good Time.[3]
She died inWallingford, Oxfordshire, England on 28 September 1973, at the age of 83.[1]
TheNational Portrait Gallery, London holds four portraits of her.[6]